Kindernothilfe

Kindernothilfe (KNH) is a charity organization and was founded in 1959 by a group of Christians in Duisburg, Germany, in order to help needy children in India. Over time, it has become one of the largest Christian organizations in Europe for children's aid.

Kindernothilfe
Founded1959
TypeNon-Government Organisation
Focussustainable improvement of the living conditions of needy children and young people in poor countries of Africa, Asia, Latin America, and Eastern Europe
Location
Area served
31 countries
Key people
Katrin Weidemann (Chief Executive Officer), Jürgen Borchardt (Chief Financial Officer), Carsten Montag (Chief Programme Officer)
Revenue
EUR 60  million (2009)
Employees
164 (2013)
Websitewww.kindernothilfe.org

Today it supports almost 2 million children and young people in 31 countries in Africa, Asia, Latin America and Eastern Europe. KNH aims to give needy children in the poorest countries of the world a chance to a good start in life. That means a basic school education and vocational training, good nutrition and health care, as well as community-oriented support to the families of the children.

KNH works together with partner organizations located abroad, usually churches, congregations or Christian organizations. However, the support of children is always granted irrespective of religion.

The head office is in Duisburg. Here, staff members and volunteers coordinate the work abroad and carry out administrative, educational and lobby work as well as launch publicity campaigns.

Finances

Donors

KNH is a registered charitable organization and a member of the Diaconic Services of the Evangelical Church in Germany. More than 90 percent of the work is financed through donations from 245.000 people who support Kindernothilfe. KNH heeds its Christian values and responsibilities as reflected in the life of Jesus.

Child sponsorships

Child sponsorships is Kindernothilfe's most important aid form which can accompany children until they become responsible for themselves.

Grants and subsidies

As well as this, it receives subsidies from the German Federal Ministry for Economic Co-operation and Development (BMZ) and from the European Union as well as church grants: It also benefits from the payment of fines.

Seal of approval

Every year since 1992 Kindernothilfe has received the DZI seal of approval.[1] This is awarded by the German Central Institute for Social Affairs (DZI) to charity organisations that uses the money received in a reliable, transparent and responsible manner.

Foundation

Kindernothilfe started the Kindernothilfe Foundation in 1999. The chairman of the foundation committee is Dr. Norbert Blüm, a former cabinet minister. The yields from the foundation capital of approx. 6.3 million Euro flow directly into Kindernothilfe projects.

Kindernothilfe works on national and international levels by joining alliances, co-operating with networks and other organisations to achieve a global improvement of economic, social and political structural conditions. It participates in campaigns or initiates its own campaigns.

Kindernothilfe is above all committed to the implementation of the UN Convention on the Right of the Child which forms an important base for its work. At the beginning of 2004 Kindernothilfe was granted consultative status with the economic council and social council (ECOSOC) and this now enables it to draw more attention to the needs of children.

Alliances and campaigns

Kindernothilfe is a member of these alliances and campaigns:

  • Verband Entwicklungspolitik deutscher Nichtregierungsorganisationen (VENRO)/Association for Development Policy of German Non-Government Organizations[2]
  • Ecpat[3]
  • Forum Kinderarbeit/German Anti Child-Labour Forum
  • erlassjahr.de[4]
  • Deutscher Initiativkreis für das Verbot von Landminen[5]
  • TransFair[6]
  • International Coalition to stop the Use of Child Soldiers[7]
  • German National Coalition for the implementation of the UN-Convention on the Rights of the Child
  • Action against AIDS Germany
  • Werkstatt Ökonomie (Workshop Economy)
  • Forum Menschenrechte (Forum Human Rights)[8]
  • Global campaign for Education[9]
gollark: Even with computers they still managed to mess the phone network up so horribly.- calls appear to use an awful voice codec- multimedia messages are overcharged massively for- caller ID spoofing is a very common thing- mobile phones have stupidly complex modem chips with excessive access to the rest of their phone, closed source firmware and probably security bugs- SIM cards are self contained devices with lots of software in *Java*?! In a sane system they would need to store something like four values.- "eSIM" things are just reprogrammable soldered SIM cards because apparently nobody thought of doing it in software?!- phone towers are routinely spoofed by law enforcement for no good reason and apparently nobody is stopping this- phone calls/texts are not end to end encrypted, which is practical *now* if not when much of the development of mobile phones and whatever was happening- there are apparently a bunch of exploits in the protocols linking phone networks, like SS7
gollark: I think if a tick takes a few seconds or something.
gollark: <@221827050892296192> If TPS drops really really low it will stop.
gollark: I actually found this page on it. https://wiki.vg/Server_List_PingAmazing how much of Minecraft's been reverse engineered.
gollark: The widget thing sounds cool. I think you could actually do it as an external webserver thing instead of a plugin, since IIRC Minecraft servers have some sort of external reporting protocol.

References

  1. "DZI". Archived from the original on 2007-06-26. Retrieved 2007-08-11.
  2. VENRO : Mitglieder – Mitglieder-Datenbank
  3. "A global network working to end the sexual exploitation of children". ECPAT International. Retrieved 2019-06-05.
  4. "Startseite". erlassjahr.de (in German). Retrieved 2019-06-05.
  5. "Die Mitgliedsorganisationen". Archived from the original on 2006-02-24. Retrieved 2007-08-11.
  6. "Transfair.org | Mitglieder". Archived from the original on 2007-09-27. Retrieved 2007-08-11.
  7. Über uns – Deutsche Koordination Kindersoldaten
  8. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2007-07-07. Retrieved 2007-08-11.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  9. "Wer_Wir_Sind". Archived from the original on 2007-08-21. Retrieved 2007-08-11.

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